Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Notes to Introduction
- DIVERS VOYAGES AND NORTHERNE DISCOVERIES
- Divers voyages and northerne discoveries of that worthy discoverer Henry Hudson, from Purchas' Pilgrims, vol. iii, pp. 567-610
- A larger Discourse of the same Voyage and the success thereof, written by Abacuk Pricket
- A note found in the deske of Thomas Wydowse, student of mathematics, one of them who was put into the shallop
- Purchas his Pilgrimage, folio, London, 1626, p. 817. VI. Of Hudson's discoveries and death
- Hudson's first voyage (1607), from Edge's brief discoverie of the Muscovia merchants
- Captain Fotherby's statement concerning Hudson's Journal of his first voyage
- Hudson's third voyage (1609) from Van Meteren's Historie der Nederlanden. Folio, Hague, 1614, fol. 629a
- Extracts relating to Hudson's third voyage (1609), from John de Laet's Nieuwe Werelt, fol., Amsterdam, 1625, 1630-1
- Extracts containing some original information about Hudson's third voyage, from Mr. Lambrechtsen van Ritthem's ‘History of New Netherland’
- Extracts concerning Hudson's third voyage (1609), from Adrian van der Donck's ‘Beschryvinge van Nieuw Nederlandt,’ 4to., Amsterdam, 1655, 1656
- American traditions concerning the third voyage (1609)
- An Extract from Captain Luke Foxe's description of Hudson's fourth voyage (North-West Fox) p. 70
- Hessel Gerritz's various accounts of Hudson's two last voyages, from the Latin and Dutch edition of the ‘Descriptio et Delineatio Geographica detectionis Freti ab H. Hudsono inventi.’ Amst., 1612, 1613: I. Hudson's fourth voyage. A summary printed on the back of the chart. An account of the voyage and new found strait of Mr. Hudson
- I Hudson's fourth voyage. A summary printed on the back of the chart. An account of the voyage and new found strait of Mr. Hudson
- II Hudson's third and fourth voyage, from the Prolegomena to the first Latin edition
- III Hudson's third and fourth voyage, from the Latin edition of 1612. An Account of the Discoverie of the North-West Passage, which is expected to lead to China and Japan by the north of the American continent, found by H. Hudson
- IV Hudson's third and fourth voyage, from the second Latin edition of 1613, with notes indicating the variations of the Dutch edition. A description and chart of the strait or passage by the north of the American continent to China and Japan
- APPENDIX
- Index
- Plate section
IV - Hudson's third and fourth voyage, from the second Latin edition of 1613, with notes indicating the variations of the Dutch edition. A description and chart of the strait or passage by the north of the American continent to China and Japan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Notes to Introduction
- DIVERS VOYAGES AND NORTHERNE DISCOVERIES
- Divers voyages and northerne discoveries of that worthy discoverer Henry Hudson, from Purchas' Pilgrims, vol. iii, pp. 567-610
- A larger Discourse of the same Voyage and the success thereof, written by Abacuk Pricket
- A note found in the deske of Thomas Wydowse, student of mathematics, one of them who was put into the shallop
- Purchas his Pilgrimage, folio, London, 1626, p. 817. VI. Of Hudson's discoveries and death
- Hudson's first voyage (1607), from Edge's brief discoverie of the Muscovia merchants
- Captain Fotherby's statement concerning Hudson's Journal of his first voyage
- Hudson's third voyage (1609) from Van Meteren's Historie der Nederlanden. Folio, Hague, 1614, fol. 629a
- Extracts relating to Hudson's third voyage (1609), from John de Laet's Nieuwe Werelt, fol., Amsterdam, 1625, 1630-1
- Extracts containing some original information about Hudson's third voyage, from Mr. Lambrechtsen van Ritthem's ‘History of New Netherland’
- Extracts concerning Hudson's third voyage (1609), from Adrian van der Donck's ‘Beschryvinge van Nieuw Nederlandt,’ 4to., Amsterdam, 1655, 1656
- American traditions concerning the third voyage (1609)
- An Extract from Captain Luke Foxe's description of Hudson's fourth voyage (North-West Fox) p. 70
- Hessel Gerritz's various accounts of Hudson's two last voyages, from the Latin and Dutch edition of the ‘Descriptio et Delineatio Geographica detectionis Freti ab H. Hudsono inventi.’ Amst., 1612, 1613: I. Hudson's fourth voyage. A summary printed on the back of the chart. An account of the voyage and new found strait of Mr. Hudson
- I Hudson's fourth voyage. A summary printed on the back of the chart. An account of the voyage and new found strait of Mr. Hudson
- II Hudson's third and fourth voyage, from the Prolegomena to the first Latin edition
- III Hudson's third and fourth voyage, from the Latin edition of 1612. An Account of the Discoverie of the North-West Passage, which is expected to lead to China and Japan by the north of the American continent, found by H. Hudson
- IV Hudson's third and fourth voyage, from the second Latin edition of 1613, with notes indicating the variations of the Dutch edition. A description and chart of the strait or passage by the north of the American continent to China and Japan
- APPENDIX
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
The English, stimulated by the happy success of their maritime enterprise, undergo without hesitation the troubles which these expeditions involve; and in spite of the laborious nature of their voyages to the east, to Moscovia, Nova Zembla and Spitzbergen, they are still bent on new discoveries. They have chiefly made uninterrupted efforts to find a passage in the west, where they have already occupied Virginia and peopled it with their colonists. This passage they have sought for between Greenland and Nova Francia. Their efforts have as yet been fruitless, and through ice and snow they have in vain fought their way up to 70° or even 80° of northern latitude. The strait which they have thus explored bears the name of its first discoverer, John Davis. The last navigator who went along that way was Captain George Weymouth, who sailed in the year 1602, and who, after a voyage of five hundred leagues, was, like his predecessors, forced by the ice to return. But on purpose to draw at least some advantage from his expedition, he directed his course to the bay under 61°, which the English call Lumley's Inlet, and sailed a hundred leagues in a south-westerly direction into it. Having gone so far, he found himself landlocked, and despairing of a passage, he was, by the weakness of his crew and by other causes, forced to return.
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- Henry Hudson the NavigatorThe Original Documents in which his Career is Recorded, pp. 189 - 194Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1860